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THURSDAY, 23 FEB 2012
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A terrifying menu for Syria’s endgame

Now that the Arab League has decided to ask the United Nations Security Council to back its plan to resolve the crisis in Syria, the prospects of international involvement in Syria inches forward just a bit more. This adds a new dimension to the already fertile debate on how the mounting violence and expanding political crisis will end.

In the last few months, I have heard dozens of scenarios for how things might play out in Syria. Some are plausible, others are fantastic, but all are suggested seriously by usually knowledgeable observers and analysts. They go something like this.

The most common scenario I hear is that tensions and violence will continue to the point in the coming year where economic collapse causes some influential figures in regime of President Bashar Assad to carry out a coup, after despairing that Assad can find a political solution to the crisis. Such a coup would be led by Alawite and Sunni military officers who would recognize the need to make a deal with the demonstrators and send Syria onto a path of serious political democratization, while sparing Alawites widespread retribution after the fall of the House of Assad. A variation of this sees an inside plot to assassinate the top leaders, and bring an immediate end to the crisis.

Another common scenario is that the Russians will recognize that Assad’s approach is doomed to fail and will shift away from their current course of using a veto to prevent Security Council moves to pressure Damascus. In this script, Russia convinces Assad to step down and leave the country with his extended family and their riches.

A variation on this sees a combination of Alawite leaders, military officers and top businessmen collectively deciding that they are all doomed if the current trends persist, and working together to do one of two things: either to engineer a coup and force Assad’s exit, or to sit him down and make clear that they – his pillars of support – see only doom, so that he must turn over power to a democratic transitional leadership before total collapse ruins the country.

A more dramatic possibility in some people’s view is for regional and global powers to impose no-fly zones and safe havens along Syria’s northern and southern borders. This would speed up the regime’s abandonment by tens of thousands of soldiers and civilians, speeding up its collapse from within. This process would be hastened by further economic deterioration impacting on all sectors of society, as tighter international sanctions – including bans on aviation and banking links with Syria – lead to shortages of basic goods and runaway inflation that make it impossible for most Syrians to live a normal life. This would also spark massive anti-regime demonstrations in Damascus and Aleppo, the death knell of the Assads.

A more drastic possibility is that the polarization of Syrian society along ethnic lines and full civil war will reach a point where the unified state collapses, and the Alawites retreat into their mountains to form their own state in their northwestern heartland. Some suggest this has been the aim of the crisis all along, with “outsiders” provoking civil strife to the point where Syria breaks up into statelets, including Alawite, Druze, Kurdish and Sunni entities.

This would occur at the same time as Iraq faces similar disintegration as a unified country and leaves behind Sunni, Shiite and Kurdish entities of some sort. Culprits behind this scenario it is said, of course, is Israel and America, whose desire for hegemony over the Middle East would be made much easier by the presence of weaker ethnic statelets rather than larger, stronger Arab states. In such a scenario, Israel would quickly come to the aid of some of these ethnic statelets – as it tried to do with some Lebanese groups in the 1980s – and thus cement both the fragmentation of the Levant and its dominance of it.

The most terrible scenario sees the deterioration in Syria leading the Assad regime to implement the Samson Option. It would seek to instigate strife and chaos across the region, in order to plunge the Levant into a regional conflagration. This option would be based on the Assads’ assumption that if they cannot rule over a unified Syria, then nobody in the neighborhood should be able to live in peace and security either. Such a scenario would involve attacking or fomenting strife in Lebanon, Israel, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq, perhaps resulting in the desperate use of chemical or even nuclear weapons.

These are only the most plausible scenarios that are widely circulated in the region these days. The more outrageous ones we will leave for another day to ponder.

Rami G. Khouri is published twice weekly by THE DAILY STAR

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on January 28, 2012, on page 7.
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Comments  
Mladen January 28, 2012 06:44 PM

Well, regime change is at this stage possible only after massive civil war or after elections. Since there is some news regarding a referendum on a new constitution and impeding elections, what is really going on? What are the chances to get freely elected legislation in this year? Otherwise, I'd dismiss the possibility that Alawite, Christian or even secular Sunni from military would dump Assad: their lives might be spared but most of them would be out of a job anyway. And after seeing the aftermath in Iraq, Libya or Egypt, the West does not wish to try another regime change by force. The Biggest winner seems to be Turkey: they would like to see more democracy in Syria. Neoliberal bent or moderately Islamic ideology of any large parliamentary group would be an additional bonus.

peter cookson January 28, 2012 08:40 PM

The outcome of the Syrian impasse will certainly not follow any of Rami's 'most common' scenarios. It is not in any country's interest for the Syrian impasse to be settled soon. Every hour for 23 years all Lebanese hoped for a 'resolution,’ an ending. Their conflict, like most others in the end, fizzled out through sheer exhaustion of all parties. The Syrian government is very powerful, very determined and very courageous. The Syrian impasse will similarly take at least 23 years to resolve and most of us at the start will sadly not even be around when it concludes.

salim aboukhdeir January 29, 2012 12:27 PM

If I understand well, you adhere to the idea that Israel and the U.S. will benefit from Syria’s downfall as it will help them build their hegemony … I do not agree as a fall of the Syrian regime will bring instability to its borders … I am very surprised that you even mention it. You follow 65 years of Arab propaganda blaming Israel for all Arab problems ... This type of propaganda supported by journalists will never help the Arab people come out of their misery!

Bronxman January 30, 2012 02:41 PM

Business leaders and (non-ideological) military officers are practical people. An implosion of the economy plus large scale use of force against the civilian population should unite the 2 groups in efforts to bring about the least violent end (in comparison to other scenarios) to this government. Even Russia would be interested in this approach since it would leave them with continuing, although diminished, influence in the region.

Nada Basma January 30, 2012 07:13 PM

The entire objective and aim of the civil unrest in Syria is, as you correctly put it , to polarize Syrian society along ethnic lines and ignite full-scale civil war, just as they did in Iraq, which will lead in to small fiefdoms and ensure Israel’s hegemony in the Middle East. Sadly, they have enlisted the help of errand boys King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz of Saudi Arabia and Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani of Qatar to make this a success. Another Arab defeat - how sad. The end game does not stop in Syria. Watch out – Saudi Arabia, you are next on the chopping block.

NeZar January 31, 2012 03:31 AM

Dear Rami, I hope you could shed some light on the Palestinian, Iranian,  and Russian factors in the crisis. I can't see any of the aforementioned scenarios as possible without the blessing of those regional and international forces. No one in my opinion would benefit from toppling the existing regime in Syria. I think the regime will prevail, but in an altered form.

del stevens January 31, 2012 10:40 PM

Responding to "Nada Basma," it's hard to fathom how you arrived at your bitter and, quite frankly, bitter conclusion. Assad is a butcher and his dictatorial regime uses torture & murder to support its interests. And this you think is worth saving? Shame on you.

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